Tuesday, May 8, 2007
eye -opening report advises enterprizes on telecom management expenses
Technology research and consulting firm Aberdeen Group is out with a powerful study entitled " The Cost of Not Acting: The Total Telecom Cost Management Benchmark Report ." "The average Fortune 500 Company reports that telecommunications and related network services are a top-line item expenses accounting for 3.6% of their revenue<" The Report's Executive Summary notes. " Our survey respondents had an average of $30 million in annual telecom expenses ranging from $250 million to $450 thousand." As to the challenges: "Some of the challenges in managing these expenses include decentralized spending, continually changing inventory, complex billing for a wide ...
I'm sure that's welcome news- especially since that Lithium Ion battery technology in your notebook PC may not have all that much room for improvement. That's according to experts cited in a major new Wired magazine piece entitled " Building A Better Battery ." The problem, writer John Hockenberry explains, is that the size and performance of Li-ons, as Lithium-Ion batteries are often referred to, is set by inevitable chemical reactions necessary to make the batteries run. And Moore's Law-which has led to smaller chips and smaller devices, doesn't apply here. The key, Russian-born scientist Tom Krupenkin believes, is something ...
A Computerworld survey of 352 influential decision-maker/readers at enterprise data centers finds that Visual Basic yielded some interesting findings. Perhaps the least surprising of these is that Visual Basic is the most commonly used programming language- in use by companies representing 67% of respondents. Given VB's event-driven nature as well as its superior ability to convert information stored in databases into data displayed in Graphical User Interfaces, Visual Basic's presence in 67% of respondent companies is almost to be expected. The next three runners-up are a lot more surprising-especially since the usage percentage for each of them implies some organizational ...
Tech@work
by Russel Shaw
I'm sure that's welcome news- especially since that Lithium Ion battery technology in your notebook PC may not have all that much room for improvement. That's according to experts cited in a major new Wired magazine piece entitled " Building A Better Battery ." The problem, writer John Hockenberry explains, is that the size and performance of Li-ons, as Lithium-Ion batteries are often referred to, is set by inevitable chemical reactions necessary to make the batteries run. And Moore's Law-which has led to smaller chips and smaller devices, doesn't apply here. The key, Russian-born scientist Tom Krupenkin believes, is something ...
A Computerworld survey of 352 influential decision-maker/readers at enterprise data centers finds that Visual Basic yielded some interesting findings. Perhaps the least surprising of these is that Visual Basic is the most commonly used programming language- in use by companies representing 67% of respondents. Given VB's event-driven nature as well as its superior ability to convert information stored in databases into data displayed in Graphical User Interfaces, Visual Basic's presence in 67% of respondent companies is almost to be expected. The next three runners-up are a lot more surprising-especially since the usage percentage for each of them implies some organizational ...
Tech@work
by Russel Shaw
computer technology work for multimedia
computer is important for technolgy multimedia and network throughout worldwide..you often watch it from anywhere else..while you sleep it will grow more and more ...
Go beyond the hype about the new gadgets to get the technology information that your business can use today. You need the latest information, not the latest widget.Before jumping into a technology solution, the business user should carefully consider two factors in order to objectively determine the criticality of specific data and applications ...
Cited in Information Week, a new survey by iGR of 1,200 mobile workers indicates that mobile workers are being hampered by their inability to read email attachments on their devices while traveling. I've experienced the issue, and I'll bet you have as well. Findings by the Austin, Tex.-based research firm headed by highly respected veteran wireless Internet analyst Iain Gillott indicate that of the users surveyed: 70 percent have "an urgent" need to view or edit email attachments while out of the office 63 percent termed the ability to read email attachments on their PDAs as "important" or very ...
Go beyond the hype about the new gadgets to get the technology information that your business can use today. You need the latest information, not the latest widget.Before jumping into a technology solution, the business user should carefully consider two factors in order to objectively determine the criticality of specific data and applications ...
Cited in Information Week, a new survey by iGR of 1,200 mobile workers indicates that mobile workers are being hampered by their inability to read email attachments on their devices while traveling. I've experienced the issue, and I'll bet you have as well. Findings by the Austin, Tex.-based research firm headed by highly respected veteran wireless Internet analyst Iain Gillott indicate that of the users surveyed: 70 percent have "an urgent" need to view or edit email attachments while out of the office 63 percent termed the ability to read email attachments on their PDAs as "important" or very ...
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